Bonsai Styles PDF
Bonsai Styles PDF
Bonsai Styles PDF
STYLES
Both this style and the cascade style depict trees clinging to a
cliff face, where they are beaten by snow, wind and rockfalls.
The trunk should have dramatic curves and taper, and the branches
should ideally also cascade from the trunk.
Tradition states that the inverted apex should be positioned
directly below the base of the trunk when the tree is viewed
from the front, but this can inhibit the design somewhat.
These days its perfectly acceptable to allow the lowest point of
the tree to be placed to one side of the pot, as if it was reaching
out from a cliff face to nd light.
The one unbreakable rule is that the lowest point must be below
the rim of the pot, but not its base.
KENGAI
This style was modelled on the natural habit of the zelkova and
is seldom successfully used for other than related species, since
it works best with trees bearing alternate foliage.
All branches should emerge from the top of a straight trunk and
fork at regularly diminishing internals until a network of ne
shoots at the tips forms an even-domed crown.
For broom styles to work well, they must be perfectly symmetrical
and meticulously trained and pruned to ensure an even and
gradual transition from trunk, through heavy branches, to the
nest terminal shoots.
Trying to rush the development will always end in
disappointment.
BUNJINGI
The tree itself may follow any style, the signicance is that a
rock is used instead of a pot, with the roots growing in a crevice
or hollow.
The rock may stand in a shallow dish of soil or, better still, in a
water tray Mixed plantings of pines with red maples or dwarf
quince and azalea are particularly successful.
The essence of the root on rock style is the natural landscape
that the composition evokes.
The choice of rocks, tree species and various accompanying plants
must be carefully made, ensuring that they all harmonise visually
and horticulturally, since repotting can be a difcult operation.
NETSUNANARI
Another obvious one: a raft planting where the original trunk lies
in a straight line.
Most rafts created from nursery stock follow this style because of
the difculty of bending a fairly thick trunk into sinuous curves.In
such cases the trunk is usually buried in the soil or covered with
moss to disguise its unnatural appearance.
The main problem to solve when making a straight raft is how to
avoid a straight row of trunks.
This can be achieved by training some branches horizontally
forward or backward before bending them up to form trunks.
It is even possible to create a fairly dense forest in this way.
NEAGARI
Most of us have driven down lanes where the steep banks have
been washed away to expose the roots of an ancient beech or
pine, and this style is based on such cases.
The roots, which must have mature bark and interesting shapes,
add a dramatic, rugged appearance, so the design of the tree
itself should echo this.
The foliage mass should be kept fairly small so that its weight or
wind resistance doesnt cause the exposed roots to bend over.
You might nd wild specimens that lend themselves to training
in this style, but more often than not, growing from scratch is
the easiest method.
SJU
Two trunks, one smaller than the other, joined together at the
base.
Trunks which divide signicantly above the base are unacceptable.
The smaller or secondary trunk should be slightly to the rear of
the dominant one to enhance the perspective.
The trees themselves may follow any appropriate style.
These bonsai can sometimes be difcult to maintain in the long
term, because as the trunks thicken with age, the fork between
them inevitably begins to ll.
This has the effect of raising the junction until eventually it is
too high.
When starting a sju, make the angle between the trunks as wide
as possible.
BANKAN